Homily Yr B Proper 22, August
30 2015, St. Albans
Readings: James 1.17-27; Mark 7; Song of Solomon
We don’t get to read that in
church very often!
The Song of Songs, sometimes
called the Song of Solomon, is one of the most surprising books of the Bible. We don’t hear it read very often, in fact,
the Song of Songs only shows up once in our three year cycle of Sunday
readings. So I thought we should seize
the opportunity to take a closer look at it this morning.
The Song of Songs is a
collection of love poetry. It is in fact
a poem in which a man and a woman who are deeply in love call back and forth to
one another, somewhat like the way we read it together this morning. “The voice of my beloved!” calls the woman,
“Look he comes, leaping over the mountains, bounding over the hills. My beloved is like a gazelle or a young
stag.” And her male lover responds,
“Arise, my love, my fair one and come away.”
The poetry is beautiful and
sensual. It overflows with sexual
imagery, so much so that among the Hebrew people, young boys weren’t allowed to
read the Song of Songs, because the images were considered to be too intense. As we read it together this morning, some of
you might have been wondering to yourselves what in the world this piece of
erotic love poetry is doing in our Bible.
There is no other book of the Bible quite like it. But I truly believe that this book, this poem,
is a gift, a gift from God. And in a
culture like ours where sex is so often separated from loving relationships and
even used as a marketing tool to sell more stuff, the perspective of the Song
of Songs is something that we need to hear.
Now we weren’t able to read
all of the Song of Songs together this morning, but if you were to go home and
read the whole poem, it would give you a series of pictures of the relationship
between two people, images which reveal not just the joy, but also the
struggles, the longing, the heart-break and the complexity of this relationship
which we call love. Three times in the
text, the woman warns her female companions not to awaken or arouse love until
it’s ready. Love is sacred, beautiful
and mysterious, but it’s not to be treated lightly or frivolously.
As part of my reading on the
Song of Songs I came across an article by a man named Nickolas Hiemstra, and he
made the point that we don’t always get this sense of the sacred and spiritual
nature of love in our everyday conversations. In the English language
especially, we’re pretty cavalier with the way we use the word love. I love my school, I love my new shirt, I love
my wife and I love to eat hamburgers.
You see how the word love can lose some of its meaning by the way we use
it so freely.
But in the Hebrew language in
which the Song of Songs was written over 2000 years ago, in the language of
Jesus, the language of Paul, there are three different words for love that are
used in the poem. The first of these is
“raya” the Hebrew word which denotes friend or companion, even soul-mate. “You are altogether beautiful my love, my
raya,” says the man’s voice, “there is no flaw in you.” The love between the man and the woman is
first of all an expression of raya, of companionship, of wanting to be
together. Friendship is at the core of
their relationship.
But their relationship
blossoms beyond friendship into another Hebrew word for love which is
“ahavah”. Ahavah is the love of deep
affection where both your mind and your heart yearn to be with the other. It is loving with all your heart, with all
your soul all your mind and all your strength.
It is the love of the will, a passion which becomes a commitment which
becomes a decision to join your life to the life of another. The root word in Hebrew of ahavah is the word
for “I give”. Ahavah then is love as
giving, as a mutual giving of one’s self to the other. In the Song of Songs, ahavah is portrayed as
strength and endurance: “Its flashes are
flashes of fire, a raging flame. Many
waters cannot quench ahavah, neither can floods drown it.”
But we’re not finished. There is still a third Hebrew word which we
translate as love, and that is “dod”.
Dod is the physical, sexual element of a relationship. “Let him kiss me with kisses of his mouth!”
proclaims the young woman, “For your dod, your love, is better than wine.”
So here we have the threefold
meaning of love which is expressed in the poetry of the Song of Songs: raya, the love of friendship and
companionship, the desire to be together which is at the core of the
relationship; ahavah, the willful love,
the commitment, the joining of one’s life to another; and dod, the passion and
intimacy of sexual relations, the physical embodiment of the love that two
people have for each other.
Now all three of these, raya,
ahavah and dod, all of these are good.
All three are gifts from God. God
is the one who created us with the capacity and desire for friendship,
commitment and sexual intimacy. And the
book of Genesis tells us that when God had created us this way, he blessed us
and saw that it was very good. Picture
each of these loves, if you like, as a flame, the flame of friendship, the
flame of commitment and the flame of sexual intimacy. The message of the Song of Songs is that when
two people can put all three of these flames together, that’s when you get a
roaring fire. This, I think, is what
Jesus meant when he talks about marriage as the two becoming one flesh. The lovers who join themselves together
sexually are giving physical expression to their spiritual union which is based
on the giving of themselves to each other in companionship and commitment. Our sexual acts become spiritual acts, the
expression of and participation in that sacred, beautiful and mysterious reality
that we call love. It has something to
do with the way we were created by a loving God, in the image of a God who is
love.
Now this loving thing isn’t
always going to be easy. At one point
the woman in Song of Songs turns in longing to her beloved, but he’s not there,
and her heart aches. Love isn’t always
easy. We know that.
Perhaps that’s why we often
try to take shortcuts. Maybe that’s why
sometimes we try to have relationships based on only one of the three flames of
love. Anyone ever heard of Ashley
Madison?
When you have affairs or one
night stands you may have the flame of dod, the sexual relationship, but the
flames of raya and ahavah aren’t there.
No companionship, no commitment.
No wonder that people are often left feeling empty and unfulfilled. No wonder that people get hurt.
Or we have friends with
benefits, a relationship which tries to capture the flames of friendship and
sexual intimacy, but at the same time puts up strict barriers to prevent the
flame of commitment, because that seems to be the risky part.
Or, perhaps there’s a marriage
where there’s still commitment, both the husband and wife are going to stick it
out for the long haul, but the friendship’s gone, and they haven’t had sex for
years. Commitment is good; but there’s not
much fire in that relationship, and there won’t be until the flames of raya and
dod are rekindled.
Love ain’t easy. Loving in a messy world that is at times
beautiful and at times broken can be complicated. Loving people who are at times saints and at
times sinners can leave us vulnerable. Our
yearning for intimacy finds expression in many different ways, some of which
are healthy and some of which are not. But
love at its best, the way God intended it to be, is sacred, beautiful and
mysterious, a deeply spiritual way of knowing and being known, of relating to
each other. God has given us the gift of love, love as friendship, love as
commitment, love as sexual intimacy, love as a roaring fire when we can put all
three flames together. May we honour the
way God created us in the ways that we love each other.
Amen.